But getting everything you desire comes at a price: $36,000 per year for membership.

Today, about 75 percent of the firm’s business is travel-related, and they also produce special events a few times per year. From a private dinner cooked by Le Bernadin’s Eric Ripert to walking in the Olympics Opening Ceremonies to hosting your own private music festival, the sky’s truly the limit for some folks.

Here are the top 5 most outrageous wishes they’ve granted:

1. Bachelor party bacchanal: “We had a fairly high profile individual in Stockholm who spent 1.2 million dollars in Vegas in a weekend,” says Albanese. “It was living in a dream, they were spending so much money.” The client’s handlers were so impressed that they asked Element to plan the client’s surprise bachelor party in Tokyo. The revelry began with geishas in Harleys picking up the guys at the airport and included participating in a mock game show, private sumo wrestling classes and samurai sword training.

London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony (Photo credit: shimelle)

2. Walk of fame: It was one client’s dream for her and her daughter to walk with their country’s delegation in the Olympics Opening Ceremony. And the Element team made it happen during the London Summer Games. “It took a lot,” is all Albanese will say about it.

Element Lifestyle produced a private music festival for a client.

3. Your own private music festival: “We have a client who loves music and Paul Rodgers but hates crowds,” recalls co-founder Edgar Estrada. So they produced a branded private music festival for the client and 600 friends on 55 acres of land in Utah for $1.4 million

4. Super sweet 16 with LMFAO: The rap duo was flown into Palo Alto from London to perform at a birthday bash at the Four Seasons after Katy Perry backed out of the original deal. “Our client told us she’d never seen her daughter so happy,” recalls Albanese. “At the end of the day, you can find a client that has great wealth but if you squander it on experiences that don’t mean anything, it’s a waste.”

5. A dinner party cooked by Eric Ripert: “We have a client in Vegas whose wife loves Eric Ripert and Le Bernadin. He thought, how great would it be to have him cook dinner in our house?” says Albanese. “It took us eight months to convince him to do it.” One December weekend, Ripert and one of his sous chefs flew to Las Vegas to cook an eight-course dinner for eight friends, including the wife’s best friend flown in from Norway. The client had to buy new cookware and glasses to meet Ripert’s standards. He spent $35,000 on wine alone and served a rare port from before Abraham Lincoln’s presidency that was found in a shipwreck. (The whole night cost $269,000 to produce.) “One of the most amazing moments was when Eric came out and described the dish with white truffles,” recalls Albanese. “He got emotional, and he had tears in his eyes. He had such passion.” The client himself didn’t stick around for dinner—he wanted his wife to enjoy the night with her friends.

I write about amazing travel destinations with an eye for food, wine and wellness. As an editor at SELF, Glamour.com, VitalJuice.com and AOL’s Patch, I was the go-to expert on travel trends, food news, wacky workouts and tickle-inducing spa treatments. Most recently, I was t...